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ladylike 10-23-2005 09:06 AM

Po' Malika. I guess her boom-boom didn't kack. :o

And the way some people talk about Malika being old, you'd think she's ready for the hospice. LOL

emeraldAKA99 10-23-2005 02:08 PM

Malika reallllly looks like Vivica Fox in that 1st pic.

Tickled Pink 2 10-23-2005 04:50 PM

Re: Tiffany...A Little Fibbin'
 
Wait - I didn't even see this! And she was the one who got hurt & had to go to the hospital! Wonder which identity she used in the hospital!:confused:

Quote:

Originally posted by lostnfound117
http://www.lildeedee.com/images/Img35.jpg

http://www.lildeedee.com/images/Img35.jpg



Diddy, meet Lil’ Dee Dee.

The hip-hop impresario knows her as Tiffany, one of the singers struggling to become a star on his create-a-girl-group MTV reality show, “Making the Band 3.”

“My name is Tiffany, and I’m 21,” the young woman said on the series premiere, introducing herself to the Beyonce wanna bes who would share a trendy New York City loft and a life of limos, clubs and show biz. “I like singing and having fun. I’m from Virginia, Virginia Beach.”

Trouble is, she’s not any of those things. Well, except for the part about singing.

She is Dav’rielle Smith, a Chesapeake resident who has performed for years at local fairs and festivals as “Lil’ Dee Dee” And she is “Lil’,” or at least a lot littler than the rest of Diddy’s pretties.

Dav’rielle is a sophomore at Western Branch High School. She is 15.

Dav’rie lle – pronounced Dah-vree-el – skipped school to crash auditions at an Oceanfront nightspot. She used a cousin’s fake ID to get around the 18-and-older age limit, which forced her to adopt cousin Tiffany’s name.

When she aced the audition, she mustered up a whole lot of moxie for a six-week whirl in Diddy’s world.

“I felt like I was just in a movie, playing a part,” Dav’rielle said Wednesday at her family’s modest Chesapeake town house. “I just wanted to get in front of Diddy, to show him what I can do, to prove to him that age is just a number.

Diddy is no stranger to

re-invention. Born Sean Combs, he has called himself Puffy Combs, Puff Daddy, P. Diddy and now just plain Diddy.

“I wasn’t using my own name or my own age,” Dav’rielle said, “but everything else was all me. The voice, the dancing – that was all Dav’rielle.”

Although the show premiered Oct. 6 and is now running weekly, Dav’rielle’s charade is over.

Here’s how the un-real world of reality television works: Dav’rielle and her housemates lived for about six weeks in the loft, working daily with Diddy’s crew on singing, dancing and that looking-good-for-video thing. Diddy cut women from the cast at random, ending up with a girl group he could turn into hitmakers.

So, will Lil’ Dee Dee be fronting Diddy’s girl group?

“I really can’t discuss that,” Dav’rielle demurred. “I’m not allowed to say what happens on the show. Why would people want to come home at 10 o’clock on Thursdays and tune in if they already knew what was going to happen?”

The next question: What were her parents thinking, letting a 15-year-old fake her way into living with 17 grown women in New York’s Soho?

“Sure, I was nervous,” said her mother, Glenda Smith, who works a 12-hour shift as a nurse at a retirement home. “But she’s my oldest, she has a good, responsible head on her shoulders.”

More important, Glenda Smith said, her husband’s family lives in the city. “She visited them every day. She was there with them anytime she wasn’t working or sleeping.”

Curled up on the couch beside her mother, Dav’rielle looks far from the poised young lady of the first “Band” episode. She’s wearing jeans rolled up to her knees, multicolored sneakers with rainbow laces and green plastic sunglasses. “It was Geek Day at school,” she said.

“She’s a little kid,” said her mother. “What you see, that’s who she is. She’s not one for the high heels and the stomach poking out of her shirt.”

Her age actually gave her an advantage.

“A lot of the women, they’d be going out clubbing,” Dav’rielle said.

“I’m not old enough to do that, for real, so I’d stay home and work on the music. The next day, they’d all be hung over and holding their heads, and they’d say, 'Tiffany, you sing.’ And I’d blown them all away.

“I was always on top of my game.”

On the show’s premiere, Diddy said that 10,000 women auditioned in eight cities around the country. When the crew came to the Virginia Beach Oceanfront on May 25, about 800 women showed up to audition.

Out of that talent pool, 38 were flown to New York to audition for Diddy himself.

He cut the field to 18, plus three women from the last season of “Making the Band 3 ,” to live in the loft and compete for a spot in the group.

Frankly, the teen’s parents never thought “Tiffany” would go so far. Glenda and her husband, Nate – they have three other children, all boys, Dajon, 2; Natequane, 4; and Dominique, 12 – figured she’d audition and that would be the end of it.

“She kept saying, 'I know I can do it. I know I can do it,’” Glenda Smith said. “I finally said, 'Go for it.’ I didn’t want her to look back, when she got older and say, 'Oh, if my mother would have supported me, maybe I would have made it.’ My mom worked two and three jobs, and she would have wanted better for me, too.”


Reach Roberta T. Vowell at (757) 446-2327 or roberta.vowell@pilotonline.com.


futurestar1 10-24-2005 05:29 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by ladylike
Po' Malika. I guess her boom-boom didn't kack. :o

You have me dying over here because Lori gets on my LAST NERVE with her sound effects.

Kimmie1913 10-24-2005 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by futurestar1
You have me dying over here because Lori gets on my LAST NERVE with her sound effects.
Me too! And you would think she just learned the word gully! Every five seconds she is telling them to "get gully with it!" or "make it gully!" Good grief!

AKA2D '91 10-24-2005 01:34 PM

Malika
 
Google her name? NOT!

ladylike 10-24-2005 01:40 PM

??????
 
Seriously, what's the difference between a boom-boom and a kack? :confused: :o

lilbay77 10-24-2005 03:45 PM

Re: Malika
 
Quote:

Originally posted by AKA2D '91
Google her name? NOT!
OOOKay!!!

Honey,

It. Is. Over.

Tickled Pink 2 10-24-2005 04:07 PM

I bit. I googled. She has a CD?

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/malika


Looks like it was before Diddy....

:o

toocute 10-24-2005 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Tickled Pink 2
I bit. I googled. She has a CD?

http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/malika


Looks like it was before Diddy....

:o


W.O.W. :o :o

I clicked on a few songs. Mostly hip hop. She sounds like Left Eye when she raps.

FeeFee 10-24-2005 04:44 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by futurestar1
You have me dying over here because Lori gets on my LAST NERVE with her sound effects.
I always laugh when Lori makes her sound effects, LOL.

Tickled Pink 2 10-24-2005 05:54 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by toocute
W.O.W. :o :o

I clicked on a few songs. Mostly hip hop. She sounds like Left Eye when she raps.

Yeah - she tried out for the wrong band. She should've tried out for "R U the Girl?"

MeezDiscreet 10-24-2005 10:45 PM

i was a bit bothered when she said "there are a bunch of new kittens ready to lick ithat milk." she is soooo dramatic.

CrimsonTide4 10-27-2005 10:13 PM

That little hip broken gal can sing.

OrangeMoon 10-27-2005 10:14 PM

Re: Tiffany...A Little Fibbin'
 
After watching Tiffany bka Dav’rie lle seems young. The girl can sing though :)

:( Sad she had to go home...I hope she comes back.
Quote:

Originally posted by lostnfound117
http://www.lildeedee.com/images/Img35.jpg

http://www.lildeedee.com/images/Img35.jpg



Diddy, meet Lil’ Dee Dee.

The hip-hop impresario knows her as Tiffany, one of the singers struggling to become a star on his create-a-girl-group MTV reality show, “Making the Band 3.”

“My name is Tiffany, and I’m 21,” the young woman said on the series premiere, introducing herself to the Beyonce wanna bes who would share a trendy New York City loft and a life of limos, clubs and show biz. “I like singing and having fun. I’m from Virginia, Virginia Beach.”

Trouble is, she’s not any of those things. Well, except for the part about singing.

She is Dav’rielle Smith, a Chesapeake resident who has performed for years at local fairs and festivals as “Lil’ Dee Dee” And she is “Lil’,” or at least a lot littler than the rest of Diddy’s pretties.

Dav’rielle is a sophomore at Western Branch High School. She is 15.

Dav’rie lle – pronounced Dah-vree-el – skipped school to crash auditions at an Oceanfront nightspot. She used a cousin’s fake ID to get around the 18-and-older age limit, which forced her to adopt cousin Tiffany’s name.

When she aced the audition, she mustered up a whole lot of moxie for a six-week whirl in Diddy’s world.

“I felt like I was just in a movie, playing a part,” Dav’rielle said Wednesday at her family’s modest Chesapeake town house. “I just wanted to get in front of Diddy, to show him what I can do, to prove to him that age is just a number.

Diddy is no stranger to

re-invention. Born Sean Combs, he has called himself Puffy Combs, Puff Daddy, P. Diddy and now just plain Diddy.

“I wasn’t using my own name or my own age,” Dav’rielle said, “but everything else was all me. The voice, the dancing – that was all Dav’rielle.”

Although the show premiered Oct. 6 and is now running weekly, Dav’rielle’s charade is over.

Here’s how the un-real world of reality television works: Dav’rielle and her housemates lived for about six weeks in the loft, working daily with Diddy’s crew on singing, dancing and that looking-good-for-video thing. Diddy cut women from the cast at random, ending up with a girl group he could turn into hitmakers.

So, will Lil’ Dee Dee be fronting Diddy’s girl group?

“I really can’t discuss that,” Dav’rielle demurred. “I’m not allowed to say what happens on the show. Why would people want to come home at 10 o’clock on Thursdays and tune in if they already knew what was going to happen?”

The next question: What were her parents thinking, letting a 15-year-old fake her way into living with 17 grown women in New York’s Soho?

“Sure, I was nervous,” said her mother, Glenda Smith, who works a 12-hour shift as a nurse at a retirement home. “But she’s my oldest, she has a good, responsible head on her shoulders.”

More important, Glenda Smith said, her husband’s family lives in the city. “She visited them every day. She was there with them anytime she wasn’t working or sleeping.”

Curled up on the couch beside her mother, Dav’rielle looks far from the poised young lady of the first “Band” episode. She’s wearing jeans rolled up to her knees, multicolored sneakers with rainbow laces and green plastic sunglasses. “It was Geek Day at school,” she said.

“She’s a little kid,” said her mother. “What you see, that’s who she is. She’s not one for the high heels and the stomach poking out of her shirt.”

Her age actually gave her an advantage.

“A lot of the women, they’d be going out clubbing,” Dav’rielle said.

“I’m not old enough to do that, for real, so I’d stay home and work on the music. The next day, they’d all be hung over and holding their heads, and they’d say, 'Tiffany, you sing.’ And I’d blown them all away.

“I was always on top of my game.”

On the show’s premiere, Diddy said that 10,000 women auditioned in eight cities around the country. When the crew came to the Virginia Beach Oceanfront on May 25, about 800 women showed up to audition.

Out of that talent pool, 38 were flown to New York to audition for Diddy himself.

He cut the field to 18, plus three women from the last season of “Making the Band 3 ,” to live in the loft and compete for a spot in the group.

Frankly, the teen’s parents never thought “Tiffany” would go so far. Glenda and her husband, Nate – they have three other children, all boys, Dajon, 2; Natequane, 4; and Dominique, 12 – figured she’d audition and that would be the end of it.

“She kept saying, 'I know I can do it. I know I can do it,’” Glenda Smith said. “I finally said, 'Go for it.’ I didn’t want her to look back, when she got older and say, 'Oh, if my mother would have supported me, maybe I would have made it.’ My mom worked two and three jobs, and she would have wanted better for me, too.”


Reach Roberta T. Vowell at (757) 446-2327 or roberta.vowell@pilotonline.com.



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